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Attempting to dereference an invalid pointer results in undefined behavior, typically abnormal program termination. Given this, invalid pointers should not be dereferenced.

Non-Compliant Code Example

In this example, input_str is copied into dynamically allocated memory referenced by str. If malloc() fails, it returns an invalid (null) pointer that is assigned to str. When str is dereferenced in strcpy(), the program behaves in an unpredictable manner.

...
size_t size = strlen(input_str);
if (size == SIZE_MAX) { /* test for limit of size_t */
  /* Handle Error */
}
str = malloc(size+1);
strcpy(str, input_str);
...

Note that in accordance with rule MEM35-C. Ensure that size arguments to memory allocation functions are valid the argument supplied to malloc() is checked to ensure a numeric overflow does not occur.

Compliant Solution

To correct this error, ensure the pointer returned by malloc() is not invalid (null). In addition to this rule, this should be done in accordance with rule [[MEM32-C]].

...
size_t size = strlen(input_str);
if (size == SIZE_MAX) { /* test for limit of size_t */
  /* Handle Error */
}
str = malloc(size+1);
if (str == NULL) {
  /* Handle Allocation Error */
}
strcpy(str, input_str);
...

Risk Assessment

Dereferencing an invalid pointer results in undefined behavior, which could result in an attacker being able to run arbitrary code.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

???

3 (high)

3 (likely)

1 (high)

P9

L2

References

[[ISO/IEC 9899-1999]] 6.3.2.3 Pointers
[[Viega 05]] Section 5.2.18 Null-pointer dereference

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